The Last Usable Hour
It is "always nighttime" in Deborah Landau's second collection — a series of linked lyric sequences, including insomniac epistolary love poems to an elusive "someone." Here is a haunted singing voice, clear and spare, alive with memory and desire, yet hounded by premonitions of a calamitous future. The speaker in this "ghost book" is lucid and passionate, even as everything is disappearing.
"blame the egg blame the fractured stones
at the bottom of the mind"
"blame his darkblue glare and craggy mug
the bulky king of trudge and stein"
"how I love a masculine in my parlor
his grizzly shout and weight one hundred drums"
"in this everywhere of blunt and soft sinking
I am the heavy hollow snared"
"the days are spring the days are summer
the days are nothing and not dead yet"
Deborah Landau was educated at Stanford University, Columbia University, and Brown University, where she was a Javits Fellow and received a PhD in English and American literature. She co-hosts "Open Book" on Slate.com and is the Director of the NYU Creative Writing Program. She lives in the Soho neighborhood of New York City.
- Author
- Deborah Landau
- Format
- paperback
- Pages
- 96
- Publisher
- Copper Canyon Press
- Language
- english
- ISBN
- 9781556593345
- Genres
- poetry
- Release date
- 2011
- Search 9781556593345 on Amazon
- Search 9781556593345 on Goodreads